

"Astronaut diapers," Hammer says, possibly joking. Which doesn't mean being perched on the edge wasn't still harrowing. "So the crew and all that could fit up there." Specifies Verbinski, "We painted out the right side" in postproduction. Tethered by a digitally erased harness, that is actually star Armie Hammer ("The Social Network") and not a stuntman - though, as Hammer concedes, "The actual stone was wider. In that scene in this movie, Reid awakens on a rickety, 18-foot-high "spirit platform" atop a finger of rock overlooking a sheer drop like the one Wile E. Left for dead, John Reid is saved by Tonto and avenges his comrades. Dan Reid, his younger brother, John, and other Texas Rangers are betrayed by a scout and ambushed by the outlaw Butch Cavendish.
THE LONE RANGER STARS MOVIE
The new movie harks back to the best-known account, that of a 20th-anniversary radio broadcast, where Capt. "It was, 'Hi-yo!' ")Īs with other long-running characters depicted in a multitude of media, that iconography gradually evolved, and fans disagree on canon. ("It wasn't 'Hi-ho!' as many people think," the show's announcer Fred Foy told the Boston Globe in 1993. So I just think a lot of that stuff stayed."īy clicking Sign up, you agree to our privacy policy.Īmong those things was the Lone Ranger's famous cry "Hi-yo, Silver" as he rode off into the sunset after each adventure. "I think it was so part of the zeitgeist back then, and it was so strong that the echoes are still here - iconography like the silver bullet and his mask and the white horse and the 'William Tell' overture. "I don't know," muses director Gore Verbinski ("Pirates of the Caribbean," "Rango"), speaking by phone. So how is it that the name is still known - so much so that Walt Disney Pictures would gamble more than $200 million on a big-screen adventure, opening Wednesday? Since then? Aside from a couple of Saturday morning cartoons and a few ill-conceived films, there's been nothing on-screen.
THE LONE RANGER STARS SERIES
The subsequent series about a masked Old West vigilante and his American Indian sidekick ran for more than two decades, and a baby boomer TV series thrilled kids through the 1950s and in reruns beyond.

Trendle and station manager Harold True had that exchange at a meeting with writer Francis "Fran" Striker, director James Jewell and others. "The Lone Ranger! It's got everything!"Īnd so, in perhaps the earliest account of his creation - written just six years after the character's 1933 debut in the pioneer days of radio - Detroit station co-owner George W. "He could even be a former Texas Ranger." "I see him as sort of a lone operator," said one.

Legend tells of a band of men operating on the frontier, where the rules were still unwritten and a hero needed to be born.
